Chemical Pathways in the Interactions of Reactive Metal Atoms with

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J. Phys. Chem. B 2005, 109, 11263-11272

11263

Chemical Pathways in the Interactions of Reactive Metal Atoms with Organic Surfaces: Vapor Deposition of Ca and Ti on a Methoxy-Terminated Alkanethiolate Monolayer on Au A. V. Walker,*,† T. B. Tighe,‡ B. C. Haynie, S. Uppili, N. Winograd,* and D. L. Allara* Department of Chemistry and The Materials Research Institute, PennsylVania State UniVersity, UniVersity Park, PennsylVania 16802 ReceiVed: February 5, 2005; In Final Form: April 14, 2005

In situ time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry, infrared spectroscopy, and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy measurements have been used to characterize the interfacial chemistry that occurs upon physical vapor deposition of Ti and Ca atoms onto a -OCH3 terminated alkanethiolate self-assembled monolayer (SAM) on Au{111}. While the final result for both metals is near-exhaustive degradation of the methoxy terminal group and partial degradation of the alkyl chains to inorganic products such as carbides, hydrides, and oxides, the reaction mechanisms differ significantly. Titanium reacts in parallel with the -OCH3 and -CH2- units, extensively degrading the latter until a metallic overlayer forms preventing further degradation. At this point, there is a cessation of the Ti-SAM reactions. In contrast, Ca is initially consumed by the -OCH3 terminal group via a reaction mechanism involving two -OCH3 groups; subsequent depositions lead to alkyl chain degradation, but at a rate slower than that for Ti deposition. These results demonstrate the subtle differences in chemistry that can arise in the vapor deposition of reactive metals, and have important implications for the behavior of electrical interfaces in organic and molecular devices made with Ti or Ca top contacts.

1. Introduction The vacuum deposition of metal layers on organic thin films is a widely used process with many technological applications from barrier coatings to electronic devices. In all these applications, the ability to control the performance of these metalorganic composite structures is greatly aided by a fundamental understanding of the mechanisms of the metal atom-organic interaction. To facilitate the unraveling of these complex phenomena, recent efforts have focused on using the chemical variability and well-defined structures of self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) in fundamental studies involving vapor-deposited metal films.1-8 An impetus for these studies is also provided by recent developments in molecular electronic devices9-29 for which the nature of vapor-deposited top metal contacts in SAMbased devices can be a significant issue.11 A wide range of behaviors and mechanisms are possible when metal atom vapors impinge on SAMs and, in general, on organic substrates.1-8 In the case of metals with no chemical affinity for the organic matrix, the eventual character of the interface is solely determined by the initial competition among metal atom nucleation to form clusters with discontinuous morphologies, uniform wetting of the surface, and penetration into the organic matrix.4-8 In the case of highly reactive metal atoms, the resulting structural features can be quite complex, ranging from a sharp interfacial layer of chemically bonded metal to a severely degraded organic substrate with formation of inorganic phases, such as a metal oxides or carbides. Here the specific chemistry * To whom correspondence should be addressed. D.L.A.: phone, (814) 863-2254; fax, (814) 863-0618; e-mail, [email protected]. N.W.: phone, (814) 863-0001; fax, (814) 863-0618; e-mail, [email protected]. A.V.W.: phone, (314) 935-8496; fax, (314) 935-4481; e-mail, walker@ wustl.edu. † Present address: Department of Chemistry, Campus Box 1134, Washington University, St. Louis, MO 63130. ‡ Present address: Motorola Laboratories, 2100 Elliot Road, Tempe, AZ 85284.

of the metal atoms with the organic moieties (or “functional groups”) will be a major factor in driving the various reaction pathways.8 In a previous study of the vapor deposition of Al atoms onto a methoxy group-terminated hexadecanethiolate SAM on Au{111}, H3CO(CH2)16S-/Au, we observed that under ambient temperature conditions no chemical reaction occurred between the -OCH3 group and the Al.5 Rather, a weak complexation or solvation interaction was observed. This is striking in view of the thermolytic stability of the oxide, carbide, and hydride compounds of Al30 and the availability of O, C, and H atoms at the surface of the SAM. Indeed, density functional theory (DFT) calculations showed that reactions of isolated Al atoms with the -OCH3 group in the SAM molecules are thermochemically exothermic by considerable energies. For example, insertion of an Al atom into either C-O bond of the -CH2O-CH3 moiety is 263 kJ/mol exothermic.5 It was concluded that subtle steric effects at the SAM surface together with inaccessibly high activation energies for bond insertion override the thermochemical driving forces under the deposition conditions. Since both kinetic and thermodynamic driving forces affect the interaction of Al atoms with SAMs, we were interested in determining how other reactive types of metal atoms behave at SAM surfaces. To normalize the comparisons, the H3CO(CH2)16S-/Au SAM was chosen as a common substrate. The metals Ti and Ca were chosen since both metals also form thermolytically stable oxides, carbides, and hydrides, like Al.30 As a further motivation to study Ca deposition, both Al and Ca are used as top contacts in organic electronic devices because of their low work functions.31,32 Calcium is also a common contact for poly(p-phenylenevinylene) (PPV)-based light-emitting diodes.33

10.1021/jp0506484 CCC: $30.25 © 2005 American Chemical Society Published on Web 05/14/2005

11264 J. Phys. Chem. B, Vol. 109, No. 22, 2005 Salaneck and co-workers have observed that vapor-deposited Ca diffuses into the near surface region (2-3 nm) of both R,ωdiphenyltetradecaheptaene34 and poly(2,5-diheptyl-p-phenylenevinylene)35 films with donation of electrons to the polymer π system to form Ca2+ ions. These authors also noted that for these PPV-type surfaces with oxygen-containing species an interfacial layer of calcium oxide forms. The inclusion of Ti was motivated also by its wide use in Si-based microelectronic applications,36,37 and its recent use in molecule-based electronic switches12,16,17,27,28 and diodes.9,20,23 Pointing to the aggressive nature of Ti, reports have demonstrated that vapor-deposited Ti reacts indiscriminately with triazine, polyimide, polystyrene, polyethylene, and epoxy films to form Ti-O, Ti-C, and Ti-N bonds,36-40 and with fluoropolymers forming Ti-C, Ti-O, and Ti-F bonds.41 Konstadinidis and co-workers have also examined the interaction of Ti with -CO2H-, -CO2CH3-, -CH3-, -OH-, and -CN-terminated alkanethiolate SAMs42 and concluded that Ti-O bonds are formed with the ester- and alcoholterminated SAMs, Ti-N bonds with the nitrile group, and Ti-C bonds with all the SAMs that were studied. At low metal coverages, the metal atoms reacted with the terminal functional groups, while at higher coverages, bonds were formed directly with the -CH2- units of the SAM. Furthermore, it appeared that in the initial stages of deposition the Ti overlayer did not grow layer by layer but rather formed clusters on the SAM surface. In this paper, we show through time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (TOF SIMS), infrared spectroscopy (IRS), and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) measurements how vapor-deposited Ca and Ti interact with a -OCH3 terminated SAM. The results reveal that both Ca and Ti react vigorously with the SAM to form M-O and M-C bonds, where M represents the deposited metal, in marked contrast to the previous case of Al for which no reactions occur under the same deposition conditions. Deposited Ti aggressively reacts with both the terminal -OCH3 group and the alkyl chain -CH2- units to degrade the SAM in a top down fashion toward the S/Au interface. In contrast, Ca reacts first with the -OCH3 group followed by degradation of the alkyl chain, but at a significantly slower rate than for Ti. These results show the dramatic differences in reactivities for these generally reactive metals and point to the importance of considering the underlying chemistry when designing metal-molecule contacts in organic or molecular electronic devices. 2. Experimental Section 2.1. Materials and General Procedures. The preparation and characterization of the H3CO(CH2)16S-/Au SAM has been described in detail previously5,43-48 and is summarized briefly here. Sequential thermal depositions of Cr (∼10 nm) and Au (∼200 nm) were made onto clean Si(001) native oxide-covered wafers. Self-assembly of well-organized monolayers was achieved by immersing the Au substrates in millimolar solutions of the relevant alkanethiol molecules in absolute ethanol for ∼2 days at ambient temperature. The monolayer films were characterized with single-wavelength ellipsometry, infrared spectroscopy, and contact angle measurements to ensure that they were densely packed, clean surfaces. In some cases, tapping mode AFM images (Dimension Series 3000, Digital Instruments, Santa Barbara, CA) were obtained to verify the quality of the starting Au/Cr substrate surfaces (typically, 1.0-1.3 nm rms roughness) and the subsequent SAMs (no change from substrate roughness). In addition, all SAMs were characterized by the initial TOF SIMS and IRS measurements prior to metal deposition.

Walker et al. The purity of the Ca and Ti employed (Goodfellow, Alfa Aesar, Sigma Aldrich) was g99.99%. Metals were deposited onto a room temperature sample using resistively heated tungsten baskets at a rate of ∼0.15 atom nm-2 s-1. The sourcesample distance was >30 cm, and the sample temperatures remained near ∼25 °C. The deposited mass of metal was monitored using a quartz crystal microbalance (QCM)49 (TOF SIMS, Maxtek Inc. TM-400, maximum error of (8%; IRS and XPS, Sigma Instruments SQM-160, maximum error of (7%). 2.2. Time-of-Flight Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry. The TOF SIMS analyses were performed on a custom-designed instrument as described previously.50 Briefly, the instrument consists of a loadlock, a preparation chamber, a metal deposition chamber, and the primary analysis chamber, each separated by a gate valve. The primary Ga+ ions were accelerated to 15 keV and contained in a 100 nm diameter probe beam which was rastered over a 106 µm × 106 µm area during data acquisition. All spectra were acquired using a total ion dose of less than 1011 ions cm-2. Relative peak intensities can be reproduced within (8% from sample to sample and (8% from scan to scan. During deposition, the pressure remained